News flash: being a lawyer is stressful.
Okay, that’s not so much a news flash as a massive duh.
But it’s perhaps less obvious that corporations should care about — and feel empowered to do something about — the stress levels that their in-house legal teams experience.
In this blog, we’ll explain how corporations can help by actively encouraging in-house legal teams to use mindfulness techniques to manage stress and strategically adopting legal technology to reduce avoidable sources of lawyer stress.
First, though, let’s look at why lawyers’ stress levels are important for organizations.
Again, it’s no secret that lawyers are stressed out. Lawyers have long reported higher levels of anxiety and depression compared with other professions. Over time, stress and its effects compound. Anxious and depressed lawyers may have difficulty focusing, leading to oversights, careless errors, and missed deadlines.
That, of course, adds more stress, kicking off a vicious cycle that may lead to insomnia, substance abuse, and complete burnout.
When lawyers burn out on their high-stress, high-pressure careers, they start looking for new opportunities, taking all of their skills and institutional knowledge with them.
And that’s a loss — financially, operationally, and in overall morale — for the organization.
We’re not being dramatic; these issues are so pervasive that the American Bar Association created a National Task Force on Lawyer Well-Being that recommends, in part, reframing well-being as “an indispensable part of a lawyer’s duty of competence.”
So, how can lawyers improve their overall well-being? Through mindfulness.
What is mindfulness? In a nutshell, it’s the practice of simply being present in the moment. Mindfulness is the opposite of multitasking or working on autopilot; rather, it’s being purposefully aware of what you’re doing, where you are, and what’s happening around and within you.
What difference does mindfulness make? Quite a lot, as it turns out. Mindfulness has been shown to help people accomplish important goals, including these:
A recent study showed that when law students were taught how to practice mindfulness, their levels of stress, anxiety, and depression all decreased. Notably, the control group of students saw all three measures rise — which makes sense, given that the “before” assessment was performed in January 2020 and the “after” was conducted remotely in April 2020.
The cornerstone of mindfulness is usually meditation, but mindfulness can be practiced anytime and anywhere. Here are a few ways to get started.
Experiment with different approaches until you find something that works for you, and encourage all the members of your legal team to do the same.
I’ve tried meditation, but I can’t do it. My thoughts are always racing! People who say that they’re “bad at meditation” may be misunderstanding the practice. To make a physical exercise comparison, people think that meditating is like holding a plank position: maintaining a perfect state of stillness with no thoughts in their mind (and their elbows fully locked out). But meditation isn’t a plank; it’s a series of pushups. Yes, meditation begins in the plank position, as you focus on your breath. But at some point, you’ll realize that you’re metaphorically lying on the floor, lost in thought. This is where the practice begins, not where it ends. Notice what’s happened, label the thoughts as “thinking,” and push back up to the plank position by again focusing on your breath. You’re not failing; you’re practicing meditation. |
To learn more about how organizations can encourage lawyer well-being, check out our webinar on Finding Balance and Success In-House.
But the burden shouldn’t fall exclusively on the legal team to do a better job of managing stress. Organizations can also reduce lawyer stress by adopting technology that streamlines particularly odious legal tasks.
A tremendous amount of legal work involves reviewing (and re-reviewing) lengthy, boring, and repetitive documents with unflagging attention to detail and an infallible memory.
Unfortunately, people — even lawyers — are inherently fallible.
That’s where legal technology comes in, with AI-powered tools like these:
Sign up for a free demo to see how these tools, especially when unified in the LinkSquares Cloud, can reduce stress and enhance job satisfaction for your organization’s legal team.